Hack and / - Do the Splits

Get two terminals in the space of one with split screens on a number of different command-line tools.

Even with the high-resolution flat-screen monitors we have these days,
screen real estate still can be at a premium. Of course, if
you spend a lot of your time in a terminal, this is even more true. When
you want to compare two files at the same time or monitor two different
sessions at once, you either carefully position terminal windows or rely
on tabs.

Tabs can be fine, but when I use terminals, I like to stick to the
keyboard as much as possible. Plus, I don't know about anyone else,
but for me, there are four main programs I run in terminals: mutt,
vim, screen and irssi. Luckily for me, all of these programs support some form
of split screens—the ability to divide the terminal either vertically
or horizontally. Although these features aren't necessarily anything new,
if you don't use them every day, it can be hard to remember how to split
the screen, navigate between the sections, and then go back to a single
screen. In this column, I discuss the split-screen features
in my four favorite terminal applications and provide a simple guide to
help us all commit them to memory.

Mutt Pager Indexes

I suppose if you want to be technical, this isn't exactly the same as
the split screens in the other tools, but while you are in the mutt pager
(the part that lets you view the body of an e-mail message), by default,
mutt fills the entire terminal with the e-mail. If you want, however, you can
tell mutt to take a specified number of lines at the top and use them
to display your index. This way, you can browse through the contents of
an e-mail message but still be able to keep an eye on the other headers in your
index. To use ten lines for this feature, simply add the following:

set pager_index_lines=10

to your ~/.muttrc.

Figure 1. Mutt with pager_index_lines Enabled

Vim Splits

Vim is my favorite text editor (I've used it for basically all of my
writing), and its split-screen feature is especially useful for sysadmin
work. I can't count how many times I've made a change in one configuration
file or script that I've wanted to add to a second file. To enable
split-screen mode for a horizontal split, type:

:split

And, for a vertical split, type:

:vsplit

By default, vim shows the same file in both
panes. Press Ctrl-W, and then use the regular HJKL keys (or arrow keys
if you aren't a home-row junkie like me) to navigate between panes. So,
if I had made a horizontal split and wanted to open a new file in the
bottom pane, I would press Ctrl-W J to move the cursor to that pane, and
then I would type :open
filename to open the new file. When you are finished
with a particular pane, make sure the cursor is in that pane, and
then save and close the file in the normal fashion.

Vim isn't limited only to two panes either—simply type the
:split or
:vsplit command again to add a third horizontal or vertical pane,
respectively. You even can split the window horizontally and then type
:vsplit to split that pane further into two vertical panes.

Figure 2. Vim with a Vertical Split

Split Screen

Screen is another one of those indispensable command-line tools. If you
haven't used screen before, it essentially allows you to open multiple
numbered shells, and you can switch to them with Ctrl-A
<number>. Then, you can
detach from your screen session and connect to it later, and in
the meantime, all the shells you have opened within it keep their
state. One way I commonly use screen is for irssi, a command-line-based
IRC client. I open irssi within screen on a server that is always up.
Then,
no matter where I am, I can connect to the remote server and resume my
irssi session, which always stays connected.

Beyond the standard screen features, screen also supports a horizontal
split screen. This can be useful if you want to monitor IRC in one window
and perform other commands in the second. Also, if you use a text editor
or other tools that don't support split panes on their own, you can use
screen's split feature as a supplement.

To split the pane within screen, press Ctrl-A Shift-S. Then, you can press Ctrl-A
Tab to move your cursor between the two panes. You will notice that the
bottom pane is empty at the beginning. Once you have moved the cursor to it,
you either can switch to a currently open window with Ctrl-A
<number>,
or you can press Ctrl-A C to create a new window in that pane. Screen also
supports multiple panes. Simply press Ctrl-A Shift-S a second time to split the
session into three equally sized panes. When you are ready to close a
pane, press Ctrl-A Tab until it has the cursor, and then press Ctrl-A
Shift-X to close
that pane.

Kyle Rankin is Chief Security Officer at Purism, a company focused on computers that respect your privacy, security, and freedom. He is the author of
many books including Linux Hardening in Hostile Networks, DevOps Troubleshooting and The Official Ubuntu